Think
51think — verb 1) I think he s gone home Syn: believe, be of the opinion, be of the view, be under the impression; expect, imagine, anticipate; surmise, suppose, conjecture, guess, fancy; conclude, determine, reason; informal reckon, figure; formal …
52think — see think first and speak afterwards think global, act local think twice, cut once evil to him who evil thinks great minds think alike the fat man knoweth not what the lean thinketh …
53think on — verb a) To think about. A girls got to think on her future. b) To meditate on. You have given me things to think on. I have never thought about the Creator in this way [....] …
54think — verb 1) I think he s gone home Syn: believe, be of the opinion, be of the view, be under the impression, expect, imagine, anticipate, suppose, guess, fancy; informal reckon, figure 2) his family was thought to be rich Syn …
55think up — phrasal verb [transitive] Word forms think up : present tense I/you/we/they think up he/she/it thinks up present participle thinking up past tense thought up past participle thought up to invent or to imagine something, especially an excuse She d …
56think of — (Roget s Thesaurus II) I verb 1. To receive (an idea) and take it into consideration: consider, entertain, hear of. See THOUGHTS. 2. To care enough to keep (someone) in mind: remember, think about. See REMEMBER. II verb See think …
57think — [OE] Think goes back to an Old English thencan. This was a variant of thyncan ‘seem, appear’, which survives in the archaic methinks (literally ‘it seems to me’), and so etymologically think probably carries the notion of ‘causing images,… …
58think — See: come to think of it Are you sure you don t want to think about this first! …
59think — Mana o, no ono o. Also: hō opu opu, piolo, kākepakepa; deeply, ho okuano o, lololo; with affection, hali a aloha, ho omana o aloha, nēnē. See nalu, thought. I think, mana o au, ku u mana o. To think much, kau nui ka mana o …
60think — [OE] Think goes back to an Old English thencan. This was a variant of thyncan ‘seem, appear’, which survives in the archaic methinks (literally ‘it seems to me’), and so etymologically think probably carries the notion of ‘causing images,… …